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(1823–1901). English novelist Charlotte Mary Yonge dedicated her talents as a writer to the service of the Anglican church. Her books helped to spread the influence of the Oxford movement, which sought to bring about a return of the Church of England to the High Church religious ideals of the late 17th century.

Yonge was born on August 11, 1823, in Otterbourne, Hampshire, England. Inspired by her friend Anglo-Catholic theologian John Keble, she tried to fill her books with the ideals and morality of Keble’s Oxford movement. Her first success came with The Heir of Redclyffe (1853), whose hero, Sir Guy Morville, made goodness attractive and romantic. At the heart of the book is the Christian theme of the mastery of self, as all Guy’s struggles are internal. The book was immensely popular with girls of the day, so much so that the heroine of Louisa May Alcott’s Little Women is shown in one scene of that book caught up in reading The Heir of Redclyffe.

Yonge’s other novels include Heartsease (1854); The Daisy Chain (1856), which depicts the moral conflict of sheltered lives; and The Young Stepmother (1861). Yonge edited a magazine for girls, The Monthly Packet, for which she wrote historical cameos, and also composed religious tracts. Her best work has a vitality that saves it from being propagandist. Yonge died in her hometown of Otterbourne on March 24, 1901.

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